September 3, 2015

The Role of the Jurist In the Emerging Global Legal Order

Luca Siliquini-Cinelli, Deakin University, Deakin Law School, is publishing ‘Against Interpretation’? On Global (Non-)Law, the Breaking-Up of Homo Juridicus, and the Disappearance of the Jurist in volume 8 of the Journal of Civil Law Studies (2015). Here is the abstract.
This paper investigates the nullification of homo juridicus and vanishing of the jurist in relation to the global-order project and the emergence and spread of soft-networked channels of post-national governance. By inquiring into the shift from the individual’s active will to the sterile behavioural schemes prompted by the universalisation of liberalism and economic analysis of social interactions, it will be argued that the jurist and the (rule of) law are no longer needed in a post-national system of rational and mechanic causations. Through an analysis of Susan Sontag’s and Josef Esser’s accounts for and against the interpretative task, it will be contended that the re-discovery of the anthropological and onto-sociopolitical function of the jurist depends upon the re-affirmation of: (1) the will’s oscillation between velle and nolle as constitutive of human uniqueness; (2) the need to interpret homo juridicus’s will power normativistically, and what this power leads to.
Download the article from SSRN at the link.

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